Two Protesters Injured with Live Ammunition and one arrested in Deir Qaddis
Demonstrators disrupted construction of a new neighborhood in the adjacent settlement of Nili. Israeli soldiers responded with baton charges, tear-gas, rubber-coated steel bullets and live ammunition. One organizer was arrested and several olive trees were burned down.
Two Palestinian youths in their twenties were hit by live ammunition today, during a demonstration against the settlement expansion in the West Bank village of Ni’lin and Dier Qaddis. A 24 year-old protester, was shot twice – in the pelvis and in the shoulder, and the second, a 22 year-old, was shot in the back of his thigh and will require an operation. Mohammed Amirah, a member of the Ni’lin popular committee, was arrested after seriously beaten, apparently for incitement.
The demonstration was organized by the Ni’lin, Budrus and Deir Qaddis popular committees.
Residents of Ni’lin, Deir Qaddis and Budrus, accompanied by Israeli and international supporters.
As the protesters advanced towards the bulldozers, Israeli soldiers and Border Police officers first fired a few rounds of live fire in the air and very quickly moved on to shoot tear-gas and rubber-coated bullets directly at the protesters. Despite the attack, demonstrators managed to reach the bulldozers and disrupt construction for half an hour. Then the soldiers started beating the demonstrators and arrested Mohammed Amireh.
As the protesters retreated, soldiers followed them to the edge of the village, where clashes ensued and where the two were shot. In addition to the two protesters hit shot with live ammunition, six more were shot with rubber coated steel bullets.
Egidia Beretta Arrigoni, Mother of Vittorio Arigoni | Il Manifesto
Translated by Sebastiao Nascimento. Italiana segue.
One has to die to become a hero, to hit the headlines and to have TV crews around the house, but does one have to die to stay human? I recall Vittorio in the Christmas of 2005, detained and incarcerated in the Ben Gurion Airport, the scars left by the handcuffs that cut his wrists, the denial of any contact with the consulate, the farcical process. And I recall Easter that same year, when just across the Allenby Bridge at the Jordanian border the Israeli police blocked his entrance in the country, put him on a bus and, seven against one (one of the seven was a policewoman), they beat him up “with skill”, without leaving any external marks, like the real professionals they are, then hurling him to the ground and throwing at his face, as a last scar to add to the others, the hair they had ripped off him with their machines.
Vittorio was unwanted in Israel. Too subversive, for having joined his friend Gabriele one year earlier and demonstrated along with the women and men of the village of Budrus against the Wall of Shame, teaching them the lyrics and singing together our most beautiful partisan song ‘O bella ciao, ciao…’
Back then no TV crew came by, not even when in the Fall of 2008 a commando attacked in Palestinian waters off Rafah the fishing boat he had boarded. Vittorio was incarcerated in Ramle and soon after sent back home with nothing but the clothes on his body. Nevertheless, I cannot but be thankful to the press and television that have approached us with composure, that have ‘besieged’ our home with restraint, without excesses and that have given me the chance to talk about Vittorio and about his ideals and the choices he made.
This lost child of mine is more alive than ever before, like the grain that has fallen to the ground and died to bring forth a plentiful harvest. I see it and hear it already in the words of his friends, above all the younger among them, some closer, some from afar. Through Vittorio, they have known and understood, and now even more, how one can give ‘Utopia’ a meaning, like the thirst for justice and peace, how fraternity and solidarity still stand and how, as Vittorio used to say, ‘Palestine can also be found at your doorsteps’. We were a long way from Vittorio, but now we are closer than ever, with his living presence magnified at every passing hour, like a wind from Gaza, from his beloved Mediterranean, blowing fierily to deliver the message of his hope and of his love for those without a voice, for the weak and the oppressed, passing the baton.
Stay human.
Egidia Beretta Arrigoni | Madre di Vittorio Arrigoni
Bisogna morire per diventare un eroe, per avere la prima pagina dei giornali, per avere le tv fuori di casa, bisogna morire per restare umani? Mi torna alla mente il Vittorio del Natale 2005, imprigionato nel carcere dell’aeroporto Ben Gurion, le cicatrici dei manettoni che gli hanno segato i polsi, i contatti negati con il consolato, il processo farsa. E la Pasqua dello stesso anno quando, alla frontiera giordana subito dopo il ponte di Allenbay, la polizia israeliana lo bloccò per impedirgli di entrare in Israele, lo caricò su un bus e in sette, una era una poliziotta, lo picchiarono «con arte», senza lasciare segni esteriori, da veri professionisti qual sono, scaraventandolo poi a terra e lanciandogli sul viso, come ultimo sfregio, i capelli strappatagli con i loro potenti anfibi.
Vittorio era un indesiderato in Israele. Troppo sovversivo, per aver manifestato con l’amico Gabriele l’anno prima con le donne e gli uomini nel villaggio di Budrus contro il muro della vergogna, insegnando e cantando insieme il nostro più bel canto partigiano: «O bella ciao, ciao…»
Non vidi allora televisioni, nemmeno quando, nell’autunno 2008, un commando assalì il peschereccio al largo di Rafah, in acque palestinesi e Vittorio fu rinchiuso a Ramle e poi rispedito a casa in tuta e ciabatte. Certo, ora non posso che ringraziare la stampa e la tv che ci hanno avvicinato con garbo, che hanno «presidiato» la nostra casa con riguardo, senza eccessi e mi hanno dato l’occasione per parlare di Vittorio e delle sue scelte ideali.
Questo figlio perduto, ma così vivo come forse non lo è stato mai, che come il seme che nella terra marcisce e muore, darà frutti rigogliosi. Lo vedo e lo sento già dalle parole degli amici, soprattutto dei giovani, alcuni vicini, altri lontanissimi che attraverso Vittorio hanno conosciuto e capito, tanto più ora, come si può dare un senso ad «Utopia», come la sete di giustizia e di pace, la fratellanza e la solidarietà abbiano ancora cittadinanza e che, come diceva Vittorio, «la Palestina può anche essere fuori dell’uscio di casa». Eravamo lontani con Vittorio, ma più che mai vicini. Come ora, con la sua presenza viva che ingigantisce di ora in ora, come un vento che da Gaza, dal suo amato mar Mediterraneo, soffiando impetuoso ci consegni le sue speranze e il suo amore per i senza voce, per i deboli, per gli oppressi, passandoci il testimone.
Organizations throughout Palestine and around the world are honoring Vittorio Arrigoni’s life and his work for the liberation of the Palestinian people. Collected here are some of those statements. If your organization is planning to issue a statement, please send it and any related URL to palestinesolidarity [at] gmail.com.Continue reading Solidarity Statements in honor of Vittorio Arrigoni
The International Solidarity Movement is shocked and deeply saddened by the killing of our friend and colleague Vittorio Arrigoni. Vik was an inspiring activist and generous soul. Please keep his family and friends in your thoughts.
We will post more information here as it becomes available.
At 8.30am yesterday morning around fifty settlers, some masked and armed with guns, descended from Yitzhar settlement onto the Palestinian village of Assira Al Qibliya. International observers from the UK and Ireland witnessed the settlers threw rocks at homes and people on the outskirts of the village injuring one local, who is being treated in hospital.
Within thirty minutes an army jeep carrying Israeli soldiers arrived. They stood in front of the settlers on the hillside approximately one hundred metres from the Palestinian homes yet did nothing to prevent their attacks. The soldiers could be seen firing guns into the air and directly towards the Palestinians who had come out of their homes to witness and document this attack on their village.
During the attack four settlers broke away from the main group and made their way to a Palestinian quarry. Two armed with machine guns stood on a ledge while two descended onto the side of the road and set fire to a car used by the Palestinian workers.
The settlement of Yitzhar was originally established as a military outpost in 1983 but demilitarised and turned over to residential purposes a year later. Yitzhar is home to a Jewish orthodox community of over 100 who have in the past decade attacked the residents and properties of Assira Al Qibliya and neighbouring villages on numerous occasions using rocks, knives, guns and arson. These attacks often happen on Saturdays, the religious holiday of Shabbat.
Yitzhar is home to Rabbi Elitzur who published a book last November entitled “The Handbook for the Killing of Gentiles”, condoning the murder of non-Jewish babies, lest they grow to “be dangerous like their parents”. Rabbi Elitzur is vocal in his encouragement of “operations of reciprocal responsibility” such as the arson attack made on Yasuf mosque in December 2009
Despite West Banks settlements’ status as illegal under international law, Yitzhar was included in the Israeli governments’ 2009 “national priority map” as one of the settlements earmarked for financial support. Yitzhar also receives significant funding from American donations, tax-deductible under U.S. government tax breaks for ‘charitable’ institutions.